2020 Season: How Far Ahead Do Practices Start?

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In order to return to competitive play safely, how far ahead do you see practices needing to start?

I believe it has to be 4-6 weeks.

Thoughts?
I’d say minimum 4 with optimum being 6. 4 would put them around 8/1.

Next question would be how many practices would be allowed/necessary?
 
I have heard 6 weeks. 2 weeks to get acclimated back to school and then at least 4 weeks of actual practice to prepare for the season.
 
Gotta think they'd have to be back at it with football activities for at least 4 weeks before they could deem it safe to start playing games.
 
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I have heard 6 weeks. 2 weeks to get acclimated back to school and then at least 4 weeks of actual practice to prepare for the season.
LOL at acclimated by "school". We can stop the charade..

Anyway from article mentioned I think yesterday where they spoke to sport medicine people 6-8 weeks seems like consensus
 
Would they go with the minimum number or a happy medium?
Difficult to say. I’d imagine they’d have to ease into it similar to spring practice. It may be advantageous to bring the guys in - with certain protocols in place - maybe mid July to get some Feeley work in before they hit the field. At this point, there are many possibilities.
 
Difficult to say. I’d imagine they’d have to ease into it similar to spring practice. It may be advantageous to bring the guys in - with certain protocols in place - maybe mid July to get some Feeley work in before they hit the field. At this point, there are many possibilities.
Easing into it looks like a sensible option. It also helps with the "optics ". A measured approach opposed to a rushed approach. My perception is their has to be individuals who are trying to be proactive about the situation and coming up with plans of action.
 
Easing into it looks like a sensible option. It also helps with the "optics ". A measured approach opposed to a rushed approach. My perception is their has to be individuals who are trying to be proactive about the situation and coming up with plans of action.
Surely Manny and the staff are considering all the possibilities. We’ve seen reports the players are getting info for training and diet. Obviously, some will take it more seriously than others. That very well could be the X factor as to who plays early and who doesn’t.
 
Surely Manny and the staff are considering all the possibilities. We’ve seen reports the players are getting info for training and diet. Obviously, some will take it more seriously than others. That very well could be the X factor as to who plays early and who doesn’t.
There is an article breaking this all down. NFL players have more mindset of getting work in, college kids, some of them dont even know how to get work in.. Nobody expect these kids to come back in shape.. lol..
 
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There is an article breaking this all down. NFL players have more mindset of getting work in, college kids, some of them dont even know how to get work in.. Nobody expect these kids to come back in shape.. lol..
Especially freshman that obviously haven’t been in the program but a few months. Even still, some will surely be self motivated enough to get some work in. Their challenge will be equipment availability.
 
https://www.espn.com/college-footba...ronavirus-affect-college-football-season-2020

Read this

This is just a selected part, also corch diaz has a quote in there somewhere

'You're going to need two months to get these guys back'
Penn State coach James Franklin asked his sports scientist, strength staff and athletic trainers to weigh in on how long it will take to get the players physically prepared to play a game once they're given the green light to resume practice.

They began working on about six different models.

"Is it 30 days, is it 45 days?" Franklin said. "Sixty days? Ninety days? What is it that's needed to make sure that we're going to be in good shape, that the players are going to be able to protect themselves and go out and compete on a high level?"

The opinions vary from coach to coach, but the general consensus from our interviews is about eight weeks. The first four would be spent mainly in meetings and with strength and conditioning coaches, with some walk-throughs beginning in Week 3. Then, in Week 4, the players could put on pads and helmets again and start a true "fall camp."

"You're going to need two months to get these guys back going again before you can even consider putting them on a field and asking them to play football," Arizona State coach Herm Edwards said. "When you rush back, that's when you get the soft-tissue injuries -- hamstrings, Achilles tendons, groins -- because you haven't done anything. Pro players, they have a sense of, 'I gotta work out, I make my living doing this,' but if you're a college kid, and a lot don't have access to gyms where they can lift, it's not like he's in football shape."

Dr. Neal ElAttrache, the director of sports medicine at the Cedars-Sinai Kerlan-Jobe Institute and team physician for the Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Dodgers, agreed with the coaches' timetable.

"As far as being able to get together as a team and be able to really ramp up the physical conditioning necessary to compete -- if you're coming into the whole process in pretty good condition -- that usually still takes about a month or six weeks to ramp up the intensity to where you're ready for the season," he said.




West Virginia coach Neal Brown said the preparation period should differ by position type.

"The guys up front, it's more about getting in shape from a strength standpoint where they'll be able to withstand contact, be able to push, lean, and those types of things. For the skill guys, it will be more about their cardio and short bursts and protecting against those soft-tissue injuries," Brown said. "A lot of people say, 'Well, back in the old days we just showed up at fall camp.' Yeah, well, fall camp was six weeks long. You had opportunity to get in shape, practice multiple times a day -- we're not allowed to do those things anymore. So I think that's why the lead-in is so important."

It's not just the physical preparation, though. There's the learning curve for freshmen, and installation of new plays.

Texas coach Tom Herman hired Chris Ash as defensive coordinator and Mike Yurcich as offensive coordinator, and said much of the new terminology and philosophy has been teachable remotely. Herman said resuming practices on June 1 would be ideal in order to start the season on Sept. 5, but even if they were told on Aug. 6 or 7, they would "figure it out."

"I know this sounds crazy because it's a completely new defensive system and a good amount of new concepts and ideas on offense, but ... the X's and O's part of it, that's the least of my worries, to be honest with you," Herman said. "Now we get four hours of virtual meetings, and coaches are testing their kids."

First-year Baylor coach Dave Aranda said he would like 60 days to get his players ready, but for now, he's trying to invest his time "in things that will stick," like concepts and situations.

"Hey, it's a two-minute situation, or hey, it's the end of a half, the start of the second half, it's four-minute situations," Aranda said. "Teaching our players, but keeping them engaged, as well ... seminal moments in a game where it's like, 'Oh, I remember that,' things we can invest in that they can carry back whenever it is we do get back together."

Edwards also said everyone will need to be tested for the coronavirus, which just raises more questions about the availability of tests, who is providing them, and more.

"Why wouldn't you do that?" he said. "You've gotta do that. That's got to be part of the program now. It's kind of ironic. We play a sport, there's no social distancing in this sport. Social distancing has been working. We don't do that in this sport."


American Athletic Conference commissioner Mike Aresco agreed, saying the possibility of an "interrupted season" due to a potential second wave of the virus is a concern for the commissioners.

"If you were going to play again, obviously, you'd have to realistically have some kind of testing protocol, and we're getting there," he said. "That's the problem. You might start playing, and the next thing you know, you've got somebody sick, and then next thing you know, you've got a whole team quarantined. How do you play with teams quarantined?" -- Heather Dinich
 
The ones that want it enough will put the work in.
Lol, what is this disney movie stuff? So if I want it enough where do u go to work out? Just illegally open gyms? For over 100 players scattered about.. Do a million pushups at home? It takes more than that to get in high level football playing shape. These dudes train dam near 6 months + to prepare for this game while carrying entire athletic dept with no pay.
 
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